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“Minnesotans planning for retirement or saving for their children’s college funds rely on the advice of their brokers to help them make smart investment choices," Franken said in the letter, which was also signed by 36 other senators and House colleagues. "However, when brokers engage in fraudulent or illegal behaviors that lose investors’ savings, mandatory arbitration clauses limit investors’ ability to protect their rights under the law.”

Franken and the other lawmakers urged the SEC to use its existing authority under Section 921 of the Dodd-Frank Act to prevent mandatory arbitration clauses in broker-investor contracts.

“We are deeply concerned that the commission’s failure to respond to the dangers posed by widespread forced arbitration will weaken existing investor protections,” wrote Franken and his colleagues. “We urge the commission to act quickly to exercise its authority…to prevent this practice and protect investor rights.”

SEC spokesman John Nester said the agency declined to comment "in advance of our response to the senator, but as a general matter we share his interest in this issue."

The lawmakers said the need for the SEC to act increased after Charles Schwab recently expanded its mandatory arbitration clauses.

“We were alarmed to see further attempts to erode investor rights when Charles Schwab, one of the country’s largest brokers, expanded the mandatory arbitration clauses in its customer agreements to include a mandatory class-action waiver clause,” the lawmakers wrote in their letter. “In this instance, Schwab argued that, in response to the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, it could include a waiver of class-action and class arbitration rights in its customer agreements.”

The lawmakers then cited FINRA’s disciplinary action against Schwab for violation of FINRA rules barring class-action waivers. In February, however, a FINRA hearing panel ruled that although Schwab’s actions did in fact violate FINRA rules, those rules could not be enforced under Concepcion.

“While the Supreme Court in Concepcion did find that the FAA pre-empts state actions that would restrict the use of arbitration, the facts in the Schwab case are notably distinguishable—not least because FINRA is a membership organization seeking to enforce its own rules. However, the ambiguity created by the panel’s ruling underscores the urgency with which the commission should adopt rules under Section 921.”

SEC Commissioner Luis Aguilar also said in a recent speech that he objects to predispute mandatory arbitration as “it denies investors the right to choose between arbitration and the traditional judicial process at the very beginning of their relationship with their brokers and advisors.”

Heath Abshure, Arkansas securities commissioner and president of the North American Securities Administrators Association, said in a statement that “As the closest regulators to Main Street investors, state securities regulators commend Sen. Franken for his leadership and shared belief that investors should not be forced into the ‘take it or leave it’ scenario they now face with mandatory predispute arbitration clauses in customer agreements with their broker-dealers.”

These clauses, Abshure continued, “have become even more troubling” in light of the Schwab decision. “That’s wrong on the merits and bad public policy. Forced arbitration should not be the sole forum available to aggrieved investors, especially those investing small amounts.”

The lawmakers also pressed the SEC to track the number of brokerage firms that are inserting mandatory arbitration agreements and class-action waivers into consumer contracts “so that they can closely monitor the growing use of this abusive practice.”

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